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Donald Trump's the Art of the Deal: The Movie

Título original: Donald Trump's The Art of the Deal: The Movie
  • Película de TV
  • 2016
  • Not Rated
  • 50min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.9/10
5.2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Donald Trump's the Art of the Deal: The Movie (2016)
ParodyComedy

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaFunny or Die presents a satirical rendition of Donald Trump's 1987 best selling business book, The Art of the Deal.Funny or Die presents a satirical rendition of Donald Trump's 1987 best selling business book, The Art of the Deal.Funny or Die presents a satirical rendition of Donald Trump's 1987 best selling business book, The Art of the Deal.

  • Dirección
    • Jeremy Konner
  • Guionista
    • Joe Randazzo
  • Elenco
    • Johnny Depp
    • Ron Howard
    • Alfred Molina
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.9/10
    5.2 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Jeremy Konner
    • Guionista
      • Joe Randazzo
    • Elenco
      • Johnny Depp
      • Ron Howard
      • Alfred Molina
    • 21Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 6Opiniones de los críticos
    • 75Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 nominación en total

    Fotos62

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    Elenco principal76

    Editar
    Johnny Depp
    Johnny Depp
    • Donald J. Trump
    Ron Howard
    Ron Howard
    • Self
    Alfred Molina
    Alfred Molina
    • Jerry Schrager
    Robert Morse
    Robert Morse
    • Walter Hoving
    Patton Oswalt
    Patton Oswalt
    • Merv Griffin
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    Jack McBrayer
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    Michaela Watkins
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    Henry Winkler
    • Ed Koch
    Stephen Merchant
    Stephen Merchant
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    Christopher Lloyd
    • Doc Brown
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    Kristen Schaal
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    • Dirección
      • Jeremy Konner
    • Guionista
      • Joe Randazzo
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios21

    5.95.1K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    4framptonhollis

    Not Very Funny...

    The concept of this movie is actually really fascinating to me. Personally, I really dislike Donald Trump, and a good satire of him would work extremely well! Also, it's interesting how this movie is a) an adaptation of his book "The Art of the Deal" b)is shot as mockumentary, and has a cool visual style, and c) Johnny Depp is playing Donald Trump!

    However, the movie itself is nowhere near as good as its concept!While I did laugh a couple of times here and there, it was, overall, very unfunny. Most of it is immaturely making fun of Trump instead of packing the movie with little details about Trump's life that would take actual research. I'm ALWAYS impressed when those behind the scenes actually do research on whoever/whatever they're satirizing.

    But, despite the movie not really being funny, I thought Johnny Depp did a pretty great job. He doesn't look or sound much like the real Donald Trump, but his performance is extremely unique and bizarre, and I really found myself enjoying!

    Also, I'd like to comment on the people angrily calling this movie "propaganda". I highly disagree with them. It's just a quick little comedy that pokes fun of Trump, it's no "Triumph of the Will"! Really, calm down!

    Overall, this movie made me agree with what Ron Howard said at the end of the credits.
    5sandiegoharry

    Funnyish, clearly partisan but worth a view

    It appears that several Hollywood folks do not love The Donald - big shock. So these folks decide to make a movie that ranges from poking a bit of fun at His Donaldness to outright attacking his character. Again, big shock. So view this knowing that it's a slam on Trump that's amusing and nothing more. I too think that Trump is a buffoon, and I get that this "movie" what whipped up in a real hurry, but a better made, more well thought out effort might have been... well, more entertaining. This movie will likely really please folks who are terrified of Trump, annoy his followers and leave the rest of us with a big "Meh... it was okay".
    7gavin6942

    Maybe Runs a Bit Long

    Funny or Die presents a satirical rendition of Donald Trump's 1987 best selling business book, The Art of the Deal.

    I have to commend Funny or Die for putting together an all-star cast. Even Johnny Depp does a fine bit of acting here, and it may be his best work in a long time, aside from maybe Jack Sparrow. This could have been disposable Internet fluff, but everyone seems to have taken it about as seriously as you could.

    My only concern is that it might run a bit long. I know it's not very long, but even in its shortness, it tends to get repetitive and they rely far too much on the "Trump is a racist" jokes. That seems too easy to me and really takes the bite out of what could have been possible here.
    8classicalsteve

    Satire of the Man with Delusions of Godhood with an Absolutely Believable Performance by Johnny Depp

    While Darrell Hammond on Saturday Night Live does a decent Donald Trump, Johnny Depp of "Pirates of the Caribbean" fame proves why he may be the best performer in Hollywood. In this relatively short satirical film, Depp delivers an absolute spot-on imitation of the business magnate-turned-television reality star-turned-republican presidential demigod. If this was a more serious film at feature length, you'd start thinking Academy Award! At 50 minutes, it's just about as long as I could take in a movie concerning the most arrogant man on the planet with delusions of Godhood, although Depp's performance is more than worth the price of admission.

    When I first found it on Netflix, I didn't know what to make of it. I began watching the featurette with lots of questions, the biggest being why had I not heard of it? The film begins with an explanatory intro by film director and former child/adolescent star Ron Howard. He explains the film was produced, written and starred Donald Trump in the late 1980's but was pre-empted by a Monday Night Football game in 1988, a lousy one at that. All copies were destroyed in a fire, according to Howard. Decades later, Howard was rummaging in a yard sale and he and another pack-rat found the only surviving copy among heaps of stuff. The other pack-rat was about the build of Melissa McCarthy, but luckily Howard won the day and has brought the film out for public consumption.

    The film begins like one of those TV movies of the week you used to see in the 1970's and 1980's. Just about every television cliché is present from the music, similar to "Dallas", "Knots Landing", and "Love American Style" to the glittering fonts. Every credit is "Donald Trump" from producer to actor to editor. The film begins with a kid stealing a copy of Donald Trump's "The Art of the Deal" and escaping into an office. Of course in the office is Donald Trump (Johnnie Depp). The film becomes a mish-mash of episodes through his book as Trump explains how he got to where he is through being a ruthless and heartless American businessman. The kid is a mesmerized one-person audience hearing Trump's "story", if story it can be called. Chapters include among other things how to win lawsuits and how to defraud tenants. A few Hollywood name talent also appear including Alfred Molina (da Vinci Code) and Henry Wrinkler (who used to play Fonzie with Ron Howard on Happy Days in the 1970's).

    While in some ways, "The Art of the Deal" is sort of like a long Saturday Night Live sketch, Depp's performance is superb. He's captured all of Trump's gestures and idiosyncrasies right down to fiddling with his hair. If a more serious film about the rise of Trump were ever produced, Depp would be the hands-on choice. A real interesting experiment in filmmaking, and if it weren't for the fact that this narcissist disguised as a human being is trying to become king of the world, he'd probably being suing Depp and the director Jeremy Konner and writer Joe Randazzo. Luckily, Trump is rather busy. Trying to become king of the world is a full-time job.
    5pyrocitor

    Bulletproof Toupée

    Donald Trump didn't coin the phrase "There's no such thing as bad publicity," but he may as well have (and he might even take credit for it anyway). For a titanic media figure whose image was already virtually predicated on self-satire (even before his recent bid for presidency), Trump's belligerent braying has courted many a satire in his time, but few that have made much of an incisive mark. If anything, the glut of recent Trump riffing, from SNL to Jimmy Fallon, have more than likely backfired in their riffing intent, and only served to further bolster the outrageous silliness of Trump's media personality, rather than drawing much- needed attention to the many problematic aspects of his campaign. As James Poniewozik from the New York Times mused, "How do you spoof a candidate who treats campaigning like a roast?"

    This is the major sticking point with Funny or Die's 'Donald Trump's the Art of the Deal: The Movie'. On paper, a fantastic idea - Ron Howard introduces a videocassette of Trump's (fictional) '80s-set informercial-turned-TV-movie, lost in "the Cybill Shepherd blouse fire of 1989" (one of the film's choicest one-liners) - the film plays as an overlong skit which flounders due to not being terribly funny, and crucially lacking in any particularly percipient satire. Is it amusing? Yes, for the most part, but fairly blandly so. With an unfocused sense of humour broadly skewing for everything from Citizen Kane gags (thank goodness for Patton Oswald and his cinema-literacy) to occasional pokes at the fourth wall (some more successful than others, though one mid-film "re-casting" bit is a winner), to toilet humour, preciously few bits raise more than a faint smile. Oddly enough, where the film really excels is as an '80s pastiche, with its washed out VHS fuzziness, corny montages, and chirpy, gratuitous child lead(s) acing the tropes enough to make John Hughes proud. There's even a Kenny Loggins theme tune, bless 'em.

    Of course, the film's main bid for attention is its 'who woulda thunk it?' stunt casting of Johnny Depp as Trump - and, yes, it's as much of a rollicking success as you've heard. With the aid of some impressive prosthetics and a mighty hairpiece, Depp nails Trump's fidgety physicality and distinctive Queens bellow. However, he's also wise enough to dig beneath mere mimicry, finding notes of preening sinisterness and occasional desperation, entirely devoid of empathy, all coalescing into a performance that feels entirely human, and all the more unsettling for it. The gaggle of guest stars are also generally good for a laugh - Oswald, transposing his characteristic neurotic schlub into a Miami Vice villain is a scream, while Alfred Molina tirelessly fishes for peanut gallery one-liners as Trump's seedy "Jewish lawyer." Even if most of the cast are invited to retool their best bits from other work, they're all still on top form - Jack McBrayer revisiting his bubbly, hollow- eyed imp from 30 Rock, Henry Winkler his blustery hypocrite from Arrested Development, while Robert Morse gets one more adorable 'top of the ladder' yuk, and there's a Christopher Lloyd cameo so stupendous I won't spoil it here. Still, it's a shame such a superb ensemble isn't given more to do than be fairly repetitively roasted by Depp's Trump, believable as it may be.

    'Believable,' ultimately, is the sadly operative word. If Funny or Die's intent was to defame Trump's image midway through the primaries, it's a bit of a redundant effort: such an unfortunately gentle satire is hardly news for Trump-opposition, while those firmly on Team Trump are unlikely be shaken by any of Depp's mugging, excellent as he is. Call it the Wolf of Wall Street effect (though The Art of the Deal is a far feebler effort): the artistic intent is to present Trump's misdemeanours at barely exaggerated face value, intending them to speak for themselves as inherently absurd and satirical. However, due to Trump's cult of personality, those already swayed by him are all too likely to reppropriate the joke as sincere, making it a bit of a disappointingly apolitical backfire of a political satire. Ultimately, Funny or Die's The Art of the Deal means well, but it's lazy, highly produced, and lacking in cohesion and teeth, muddying its point in a bunch of loud, airy bluster counterbalanced with infectious enough buffoonery to ride out in spite of itself. In short, it's everything Donald Trump would love.

    -5/10

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Johnny Depp brought his own team of make-up artists and hairstylists.
    • Errores
      At the bar, Trump refers to Roy Cohn as "right-hand man to Senator Eugene McCarthy." Cohn worked for anti-Communist Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy, not Liberal Democratic Minnesota Senator Eugene McCarthy.
    • Citas

      Donald J. Trump: Mr. Gorbatchev, tear down this wall. I can build you a much nicer one.

    • Créditos curiosos
      At the end of the movie there are fake credits for the movie, crediting Donald J. Trump for almost every task (exceptions are e.g. "Catering - The Mexicans"). During these credits Donald Trump is talking to the audience. After that the real credits for the movie appear. After these credits Ron Howard appears and says how awful the movie was and he wants all to forget that this movie or even Donald Trump exists.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Diminishing Returns: Back to the Future (2018)
    • Bandas sonoras
      The Art of the Deal
      Performed by Kenny Loggins

      Lyrics by Owen Burke and Joe Randazzo

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 10 de febrero de 2016 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitio oficial
      • Funny Or Die website
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Donald Trump's The Art of the Deal: The Movie
    • Productora
      • Funny or Die
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    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      50 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.78 : 1

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